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Sunday, July 7, 2013

The Gift that keeps on giving - Men's Health (menshealth.com)

The Pastime That Extends Your Life

When the going gets tough, the tough give back. Volunteering may help you live longer, finds new research in the journal Health Psychology.
In the study, people who reported a major stressor (like a job loss) in the last year were 30 percent more likely to die within a 5-year follow-up than those who hadn’t had a crisis. The exception: People who did volunteer work had no increased risk of dying.
One possible reason: Selfless acts may release the bonding hormone oxytocin, which blunts stress, says researcher Michael Poulin, Ph.D., of the University of Buffalo. That’s key—stress can trigger heart attacks.
How much giving is enough? Try 20 to 39 hours a year, the average range of time people in the study volunteered. Looking for a cause that’s worthy of your time? Start with these 3 guy-friendly charities.
Stoked (stoked.org)
Hit the beach, the slopes, and the streets—it still counts as volunteer work. This charity pairs you up with an underprivileged kid and sends the two of you surfing, snowboarding, or skateboarding for the day. Stoked takes children out of their comfort zone and lets them experience something new, says Steve Larosiliere, the organization’s president and founder. Plus, each sport teaches kids—and you—how to overcome obstacles, he says. 
Big Brothers Big Sisters (bbbs.org)

There’s a mantra that has floated around Big Brothers Big Sisters headquarters for years, according to CEO T. Charles Pierson: To be a man, you have to see a man. “So many of life’s lessons are caught, not taught,” Pierson says of his organization, which pairs adults with hard-luck kids and kickstarts long-lasting relationships in the process. Make your little brother a part of your life: Hit up a ballgame, see a movie, or even just do yard work, and you’ll impart your wisdom to him along the way.
The National Alliance for Youth Sports (nays.org)

Just because your Little League days are long gone doesn’t mean you can’t be a part of someone else’s. The National Alliance for Youth Sports offers online training sessions for coaches who want to brush up on their skills or start from scratch. Sure, coaching youth sports keeps you active and healthy, but it also teaches you to lead by example, says John Engh, the organization’s Chief Operating Officer. 

Universities among African Global Investors - Reuters (uk.reuters.com)

Africa makes the grade for richest U.S. university investors



An undocumented UCLA student attends a graduation ceremony for UCLA ''Dreamers'' or Dream Act students at a church near the campus in Los Angeles, California June 15, 2012. REUTERS/Jonathan Alcorn
An undocumented UCLA student attends a graduation ceremony for UCLA ''Dreamers'' or Dream Act students at a church near the campus in Los Angeles, California June 15, 2012.
Credit: Reuters/Jonathan Alcorn
JOHANNESBURG | Sun Jul 7, 2013 4:12pm BST
(Reuters) - America's wealthiest universities are venturing into Africa's fast-growing frontier markets in search of outsized investment returns that will allow them to offer scholarships, lure star professors and fund research.
For Sub-Saharan Africa, recognition from these deep-pocketed U.S. institutions, who have often earned envy among fellow global investors for their strong returns, marks a significant shift.
American university endowments - permanent funds of educational institutions - pride themselves on spotting new investment opportunities early, such as venture capital, private equity and natural resources such as timber. Combined, they manage assets of over $400 billion (268 billion pounds).
A study of 831 endowments by the Commonfund Institute and the National Association of College and University Business Officers published this year showed their annual net returns in the 10 years to June 30, 2012, averaged 6.2 percent.
In the same 10-year period, returns for the U.S. S&P 500 stock index were 5.3 percent.
In Africa, they are seeing many of the trends that played out in emerging markets like China, India or Brazil - strong economic growth, an emerging middle class, greater political stability and improved government balance sheets.
These are just the attractions that U.S. President Barack Obama highlighted on his recent trip to the continent when he urged American and other investors to "c'mon down" to Africa.
"The growth, consumer spending, improved governance and disposable wealth, they're all positive stories," said William McLean, who manages Northwestern University's $7 billion endowment.
His team is investing in Nigeria and Kenya among other countries and recently doubled its exposure to Africa.
"Our motivations are making some money," he told Reuters in a telephone interview. "You have to look everywhere for growth."
It is difficult to know exactly how many U.S. university endowments have put money in Africa because most prefer not to discuss their investment strategy.
Wale Adeosun, founding partner at New York-based investment firm Kuramo Capital Management, said endowments' interest in Africa began after the 2008-2009 financial crisis. He estimates that 10 to 15 percent of these institutions are already investing in Africa. Up to 30 percent may be seriously looking for deals there, he says.
"The larger pools of capital are here in the U.S. and you're seeing the interest picking up about exploring opportunities in Africa," Adeosun added.
Many endowments are required or aim to channel about 5 percent of their market value to their school's budget each year, to fund scholarships, research and new campus facilities.
The interest means that Africa is attracting a new class of investor - those with unlimited time horizons, in contrast to the speculative hot money that poured into the region before 2008 only to vanish when the global financial crisis hit.
"It's a lot more patient capital and ... the healthy thing about that interest is that it's likely to withstand the short term noise around the tapering of QE (U.S. quantitative easing)," said Razia Khan, head of Africa research at Standard Chartered.
Besides offering the possibility of cheaper assets and higher returns that have been hard to come by since the global financial crisis, Africa along with other frontier markets also provides more diversification for the investors.
"NOT SUCH A SCARY PLACE"
U.S. endowments' awakening appetite for Africa is another sign that the continent is shedding its past reputation for conflict, poverty and aid-dependency in favour of a more positive image of progress.
Lindel Eakman, managing director of private markets at the University of Texas Management Company (UTIMCO), told a private equity conference in Cape Town earlier this year that Africa's reality is different to what is often reflected by media coverage.
"Contrary to the public television out there, it wasn't such a big, dark, scary place ... We are glad to be here," he said.
Eakman added that UTIMCO, which oversees investments for the University of Texas and Texas A&M Systems, with assets of around $25 billion, had made two commitments to Africa through the private equity firms Helios and Actis.
Besides Northwestern and the University of Texas, which rank among the ten biggest U.S. endowments, other large schools investing in Africa include the University of Michigan, the University of Notre Dame and the University of Wisconsin. Between them these institutions manage around $50 billion.
Rockefeller University, a biomedical research institute in New York with around $1.7 billion in assets, expects to make an allocation to Africa this calendar year and has identified outside managers, chief investment officer Amy Falls said.
For Indiana-based Notre Dame, Africa accounts for about 2 percent of the $8 billion endowment. This exposure could increase to 4 or 5 percent in the next five years, said chief investment officer Scott Malpass.
"We've done a lot in ChinaBrazil, India. As Africa continued to evolve it was just a natural area for us to spend time there," he said, adding that rising incomes and the improving quality of businesses in Africa were big draws.
Harvard University, whose $31 billion endowment is the biggest in the United States, has been exploring the investment landscape in Africa, according to a banking source who said his bank was approached by the university a few months ago.
"There has been some interest," he said. "They were looking to debt instruments and private equity." According to Harvard's tax filings for the year ending June 30, 2012, the university had investments of about $198 million in sub-Saharan Africa, but this represented just 0.5 percent of its total investments.
CHASING 8 PCT RETURN
Those who have taken the plunge into Africa are treading cautiously, concerned about political risk, corruption and the relative immaturity of markets in the region.
"This is a long term process. We're looking out 15, 20 years so we're starting slow and proceed with caution," said Tom Olson, who oversees the University of Wisconsin Foundation's $2.1 billion endowment, which has commitments with Actis.
Investors are also gaining comfort from the "slowly increasing" number of good quality managers handling deals in Africa, said a senior private equity executive who said at least five endowments had made commitments to his firm's latest fund.
"They expect who they give money to be of the same quality as the teams they give money to in the U.S. and Asia," he said, asking not to be named.
The small size and illiquidity of the region's capital markets are another worry, especially for the richest universities whose assets can dwarf the GDP of smaller African countries.
"If everybody goes in and starts trying to buy things it's going to move the prices and grab the value away so you can't go in and take a big position," said Bill Jarvis, managing director of the Commonfund Institute, the research arm of Commonfund, which manages over $24 billion for more than 1,500 institutions.
Kuramo Capital's Adeosun said universities recognise the need to consider frontier markets like Africa if they want to meet their return objectives.
"You have to make 5 percent plus inflation plus expenses," said Adeosun. "They're all chasing an 8 percent type return."

(Additional reporting by Wendell Roelf in Cape Town; Editing by Pascal Fletcher, Ron Askew)

China's push for a cleaner planet - WRI Insights (insights.wri.org)

China Invests Billions In International Renewable Energy Projects

Rooftop solar panels in Kunming, China. Photo credit: Matthijs Koster, Flickr
It’s well-known that China ranks first in the world in attracting clean energy investment, receiving US$ 65.1 billion in 2012. But new analysis from WRI shows another side to this story: China is increasingly becoming a global force in international clean energy investment, too. In fact, the country has provided nearly $40 billion dollars to other countries’ solar and wind industries over the past decade.
This investment is consistent with a broader trend of major emerging economies like China, India, and Brazil becoming important sources of global overseas invest¬ments. WRI’s new working paper, China’s Overseas Investments in the Wind and Solar Industries: Trends and Drivers, helps to better understand China’s renewable energy investments overseas, as well as the policy and market forces that drive them.

China’s Overseas Wind and Solar Investments, By the Numbers

According to our research, Chinese companies have made at least 124 investments in solar and wind industries in 33 countries over the past decade (2002 – 2011), more than half of which were made in 2010 and 2011 (see Figure 1). Despite some gaps in the data that prevent us from generalizing about all of China’s wind and solar investments, we learned that:
  • Of the 54 investments for which financial data were available, the cumulative amount invested came to nearly US$40 billion.
  • China invested roughly US$10 billion in 16 wind projects and US$27.5 billion in 38 solar investments.
  • Of 53 investments with capacity data available, the cumulative installed capacity added was nearly 6,000 MW.
  • The majority of investments were in electricity generation. Several investments were made in manufacturing facilities and to establish sales and marketing offices.
  • Most of the investments were in developed countries. A huge amount went to the United States, as well as Germany, Italy, and Australia. A handful of developing countries—including South Africa, Pakistan, and Ethiopia—also attracted multiple investments.

Market Factors Drive Overseas Investments

China’s investments in the wind and solar industries are driven by many factors. Both wind turbine and solar photovoltaic (PV) manufacturing industries have grown substantially – in 2010, four Chinese companies from each industry ranked among world’s top 10 manufacturers for wind turbine and solar PV respectively. However, their market bases are quite different – China’s wind industry relies on its vast yet oversupplied domestic market, whereas the solar industry relies on the international market for 95 percent of its sales.
Both industries need to boost sales in international markets, which has not always been easy. Chinese wind companies are relatively new entrants to the international markets. Declining subsidies in the European solar market have decreased demand for Chinese solar products. As a result, direct investments overseas are seen as a way of retaining and expanding market share, typically through creating demand for the export of products.

Additional Factors that Support Overseas Investments

Other factors that motivate investment include:
  • the quest for new technologies
  • opportunities to acquire undervalued assets in the wake of the financial crisis
  • the financing support provided by state banks for overseas investments and engineering, procurement, and construction
  • policy support from the Chinese government
  • renewable energy targets and tax benefits in host countries

What Effect Will this Investment Have on the Climate?

Understanding China’s overseas investments in renewable energy is a start towards exploring the climate change impacts of these investments. With its low-cost financing and a robust renewable energy industry, China has the potential to advance clean energy development in countries across the world.
China still has more work to do, though, for its investments to be truly supportive of global climate change goals. For one, China will need to rapidly scale its renewable energy investments globally—especially in developing nations. It will also need to shift away from investments in fossil fuel energy, such as coal and petroleum, which currently make up the lion’s share of China’s overseas energy investments, along with hydropower investments.
But if current trends and drivers are any indication, China’s renewable energy investments will continue to grow over the coming years. If accelerated and scaled, these investments can substantially contribute to building a global, low-carbon economy.
- See more at: http://insights.wri.org/news/2013/06/china-invests-billions-international-renewable-energy-projects#sthash.4lPRaz3H.dpuf

World's Largest Building

To put this in perspective, Chengdu's New Century Global Center is big enough to house 20 Sydney Opera Houses. To put this in perspective, Chengdu's New Century Global Center is big enough to house 20 Sydney Opera Houses.
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Chengdu's New Century Global Center
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STORY HIGHLIGHTS
  • New Century Global Center is the 'largest freestanding building in the world'
  • Mega-structure capable of housing 20 Sydney Opera Houses
  • Attractions include an IMAX cinema, water park and luxury retail outlets
(CNN) -- The superlatives in China continue -- the latest symbol of China's "bigger is much, much better" ethos is open for business.
Located in Chengdu (population 14 million), capital of Sichuan province in southwestern China, the New Century Global Center is the "largest freestanding building in the world," Chinese officials say.
Though the words "world's largest" usually bring to mind an image of a towering skyscraper, this project actually isn't all that tall. But it's certainly big.
At 500 meters long, 400 meters wide and 100 meters high, the 1.7-million-square-meter mega-structure is capable of housing 20 Sydney Opera Houses and almost three times the size of the Pentagon in Washington, D.C.
The Global Center, which opened June 28, is home to business offices, hotels, movie theaters, shopping malls, a faux Mediterranean village and family-themed attractions such as a water park called Paradise Island.
The New Century Global Center is located in an entirely new planned area of Chengdu called Tainfu New District.
Chengdu is also currently expanding its subway line and plans to construct a new airport by 2020, further suggesting official ambitions to make the city an economic and cultural capital of western China.
From June 6-8, Chengdu hosted this year's Fortune Global Forum,an annual invite-only event featuring chairs, presidents, and CEOs of the world's largest companies.

According to Xinhua, China's official state media, by the end of 2012 Chengdu's GDP had hit 800 billion RMB (US$130.48 billion).'

Koreas to hold talks this week (CNN.com)


Koreas to hold talks on reopening Kaesong complex

By K.J. Kwon, CNN
updated 10:21 AM EDT, Thu July 4, 2013


South Korean troops stand at a checkpoint on a road leading to North Korea's Kaesong Industrial Complex in April.
South Korean troops stand at a checkpoint on a road leading to North Korea's Kaesong Industrial Complex in April.
STORY HIGHLIGHTS
  • Talks set to be held at building on North Korean side of neutral border village
  • Joint industrial complex at Kaesong closed in May amid increasing tensions
  • Some $2 billion worth of goods have been produced in Kaesong since operations began in 2005
Seoul, South Korea (CNN) -- Pyongyang has agreed to South Korea's offer for working-level talks on reopening the suspended joint industrial complex at Kaesong, the South Korean Unification Ministry said.
The talks are scheduled to be held at 10 a.m. Saturday (9 p.m. Friday ET) at Tongilgak, an administrative building on the North Korean side of the neutral border village of Panmunjom.
Kaesong, which is a bellwether of North-South ties, was closed this spring -- a casualty of increasing tensions between the two Koreas after the North warned that war could erupt.

Each side will have three-member delegations, South Korea's Yonhap News Agency said, citing the Seoul government.

"The agreement came after North Korea, revising its earlier stance, did not insist that South Korean businessmen should be allowed to visit their plants in Kaesong at the same time or ahead of the government contact," Yonhap reported. "South Korea maintained that government contact should precede any visit to Kaesong by South Korean businessmen."

The North wanted the talks to be held at Kaesong and with South Korean businessmen permitted to accompany the delegation, proposals the South rejected.
Seoul's proposal for talks came a day after North Korea invited businessmen from South Korean companies to return to the zone to check on their facilities and equipment.
The talks "were in consideration of the damages to the companies operating in Kaesong after three months of suspension and the beginning of monsoon season," Kim Hyung-suk, South Korea's Unification Ministry spokesman, said in a briefing. "The Kaesong issue can only be resolved through dialogue by government authorities."
The operation was completely shut down in May when the last remaining South Korean workers left the facilities, but work had been winding down for about a month amid heightened tensions. In April, North Korea restricted South Korean workers' access to the zone. Workers had to leave when supplies such as food, water and raw materials were cut off.
The North-South tensions seemed to be easing somewhat after Pyongyang agreed to high-level talks with the South in June. Those talks were called off at the eleventh hour after disagreements over the level of the delegates who would represent each side.
On Wednesday, North Korea also restored the Panmunjom communication hotline with the South, which had been cut off repeatedly over the past four months.
"North Korea is probably feeling an unprecedented level of diplomatic isolation with pressures coming from the international community. It is also fully aware of the value of the Kaesong Industrial Complex, which provides a considerable amount of hard foreign currency," said Kim Tae-woo, former president of the Korea Institute for National Unification.
"But stirring tensions, then going back to dialogue, is part of North Korea's usual tactics. We don't need to attach too much weight to this easing of tension," he added.
North Korea already had barred South Korean workers from entering the complex before May. In 2008, access was restricted after a human rights group distributed propaganda leaflets via balloon into North Korea. South Korean workers were blocked again in 2009 during an annual U.S.-South Korean military drill.
Some $2 billion worth of goods have been produced in Kaesong between initial operations in 2005 and the end of 2012, according to the South Korean Unification Ministry.
The average wage for North Korean workers in Kaesong Industrial Complex is $134 per month, according to the South Korean ministry. North Korean authorities take about 45% of their wages for various taxes.
CNN's Diana Magnay and Joe Sterling contributed to this report

Tuesday, April 23, 2013

Budget by Crisis? We Must Demand Better via National Priorities.org

The word Sequestration is being thrown around quite a bit lately. 


So I decided to do a little research (So you wouldn't have too). Here is the 411 on those infamous Sequester Cuts that appointed representives had the ability to prevent but due to their lack of action and responsiveness to the needs of the American People (Shocker there, huh) recently went into effect

While Sequestration is most definitely not the Optimum Condition for the people of one of the greatest nations in the world, enlightenment is. Hence a little information from me to provide you with just that. Never forget... knowledge is power:



se·ques·ter  

/səˈkwestər/

Verb
Isolate or hide away (someone or something): "the artist sequestered himself in his studio for two years".
Noun
A general cut in government spending.



Sequestration, a looming government shutdown, no President's budget proposal for 2014, the debt ceiling... these crises are failures of Congress to fulfill its responsibility to our nation. We must demand a better federal budget.
Enough is enough.
We've succumbed to sequestration.
We're facing a looming government shutdown on March 27.
We're threatened with the expiration of a debt ceiling suspension in May.
And at the same time, we may be embarking on a broken FY 2014 budget process.
Join us in demanding more from our elected officials in Washington D.C.! Take Action Now .

Demand a Better Federal Budget

What we're asking for is not a lot. In fact, all it requires is lawmakers to do their jobs.

1. Repeal Sequestration: Slash and burn budgeting fails our democracy
This widely unpopular legislation was never meant to happen - and for good reason. Approximately $85 billion in automatic, across-the-board federal spending cuts in fiscal year 2013 will affect nearly every Americanover the next months and years.

2. Pass a 2013 Budget: Governing without a budget is irresponsible
Our federal government has been operating without a formal budget since Oct. 1, 2012. The continuing resolution only serves as a stop-gap measure to continue funding at 2012 levels. This means our nation is in a time warp.
3. Give us an accountable 2014 budget process: Our democracy and people deserve it
Our federal budgeting process is broken. Americans deserve a transparent and accountable budget process - the level of dysfunction we've seen in recent years flies in the face of government by and for the people. See our analysis of 2014 budget proposals from the House, Senate, and Congressional Progressive Caucus.
4. Avoid expiration of the debt ceiling: We don't need another crisis
Failure to raise the debt ceiling would cost the government many billions of dollars in higher borrowing costs and would trigger a government shutdown. We need to raise the debt ceiling limit beyond the May 18 expiration to ensure continued operation of our government.

More Information: FY2013 Budget

Since Oct. 1 the government has been running on a stop-gap spending measure called a continuing resolution (CR), which basically maintains status quo funding levels from 2012. The current CR expires on March 27, which means that the federal government will shutdown on March 28 unless Congress passes new legislation to continue to fund its operations. Cogress is currently considering a new CR that will fund the government through Sept. 30, 2013.

More Information: FY2014 Budget

You've likely heard news in recent days about the release of the Paul Ryan budget, plus budgets put out by the Senate Budget Committee and the Congressional Progressive Caucus. Those budgets are proposals for fiscal year 2014 – which starts Oct. 1, 2013. In other words, Congress has begun the 2014 budget process even though the fiscal 2013 budget is still up in the air.

More Information: Sequestration

As of March 1, nearly every American will begin to feel the impact of sequestration – approximately $85 billion in automatic, across-the-board federal spending cuts in fiscal year 2013 focused almost exclusively on discretionary spending. What does it mean for you?

Additional Resources

Take Action with our #BetterBudget campaign!

We deserve a budget that reflects the voices of the people.
Join us to Demand a #BetterBudget from Congress and the President. We're using social media to spread awareness and action so that our legislators hear our voices and listen to our nation's priorities for the federal budget.
We must make our voices heard.  Join the Demand a Better Budget campaign !

Ways to Take Action Now:

  • Tweet to your Congressperson demanding a #betterbudget. (Scroll down to see sample tweets)
  • Share #betterbudget images on  Facebook . (See sample posts below.)
  • Join our mailing list  for updates and news on Fiscal Cliff II
  • Follow us on  Twitter  and  Facebook  

Tweet your Congressperson!

Find the Twitter handle  for people who represent you in Washington.
Use one of these tweets or write your own to Demand a #BetterBudget!
  • We need a  #betterbudget  for our nation. @[name] please avoid  #fiscalcliff2  with equitable fiscal solutions.
  • .@[name] a  #betterbudget  will reflect the priorities of people. Get our  #democracy  back on track.  #fiscalcliff2
  • .@[name] I'm tired of dysfunction in  #Congress . Deliver on your responsibility to give the nation a  #betterbudget .
  • .@[name] for the future of our children, we need a  #betterbudget  for our nation that reflects people, not politics.
  • .@[name] don't let our nation go over  #fiscalcliff2 . Get the work done on a  #betterbudget  before it's too late.

Voice your priorities for a #betterbudget on Facebook

Share one of NPP's Facebook images or post to your wall and tag the White House or your Congressperson. Here's a sample Facebook post:
  • Our nation is facing another Fiscal Cliff if Congress doesn't take action to resolve our budget challenges. It's time for a #betterbudget that reflects the priorities of people, not politics. [Add a statement about YOUR OWN priorities for how your tax dollars should be spent.]
  • Share NPP's #betterbudget images on Facebook .